What does Google say about SEO? /
Quick SEO Quiz

Test your SEO knowledge in 5 questions

Less than a minute. Find out how much you really know about Google search.

🕒 ~1 min 🎯 5 questions

Official statement

Content placed in collapsible sections (accordions/tabs) may be less considered by Google, as it is viewed as less relevant. This content should be accessible via clean URLs to be properly indexed.
12:09
🎥 Source video

Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 49:13 💬 EN 📅 22/09/2016 ✂ 23 statements
Watch on YouTube (12:09) →
Other statements from this video 22
  1. 2:04 Pourquoi vos données de clics disparaissent-elles entre Search Console et Analytics après une migration HTTPS ?
  2. 2:04 Pourquoi Google ne détecte-t-il pas automatiquement votre migration HTTPS dans la Search Console ?
  3. 3:38 Les backlinks spam .xyz et autres domaines douteux nuisent-ils vraiment au SEO ?
  4. 3:41 Faut-il vraiment désavouer les backlinks de mauvaise qualité ?
  5. 6:34 La compatibilité mobile est-elle vraiment obligatoire pour ranker en top position ?
  6. 7:13 La compatibilité mobile reste-t-elle vraiment déterminante pour le classement ?
  7. 9:29 Comment Google transfère-t-il réellement les signaux lors d'un changement de domaine ?
  8. 10:27 Google transfère-t-il vraiment tous les signaux lors d'une migration de domaine ?
  9. 15:42 Faut-il vraiment limiter les structured data à un seul produit par page pour obtenir des rich snippets ?
  10. 16:49 Faut-il vraiment créer une page distincte pour chaque produit balisé en Rich Snippets ?
  11. 28:53 Pourquoi vos sitemaps XML s'affichent-ils dans les résultats de recherche et comment l'empêcher ?
  12. 30:00 Les sous-domaines peuvent-ils vraiment affiner le filtrage SafeSearch de Google ?
  13. 30:26 Faut-il vraiment corriger toutes les erreurs de crawl dans Search Console ?
  14. 32:53 Faut-il vraiment s'inquiéter des erreurs de titres dupliqués dans la Search Console ?
  15. 36:12 Google fusionne-t-il vraiment vos contenus multilingues en une seule entité de classement ?
  16. 37:29 Le geotargeting peut-il vraiment booster vos classements locaux sur Google ?
  17. 38:13 Hreflang booste-t-il vraiment votre visibilité internationale ?
  18. 42:42 Faut-il vraiment sacrifier la qualité visuelle pour gagner quelques millisecondes ?
  19. 45:58 Pourquoi Google n'indexe-t-il pas les images intégrées en CSS Sprites pour la recherche visuelle ?
  20. 50:00 Faut-il vraiment paniquer devant une hausse des erreurs de crawl dans Search Console ?
  21. 54:03 Faut-il vraiment afficher tout votre contenu au premier chargement pour être indexé ?
  22. 74:16 Optimiser la vitesse jusqu'à l'obsession apporte-t-il vraiment un gain SEO mesurable ?
📅
Official statement from (9 years ago)
TL;DR

Google claims that content hidden in accordions or tabs may be undervalued as it is deemed less relevant to users. For SEO, this means that strategic information placed behind a click may weigh less in rankings. The solution? Use dedicated URLs or rethink the architecture to directly expose critical content.

What you need to understand

Why does Google undervalue hidden content?

Google's logic is based on immediate user experience. Content visible on the first page load is deemed more central than text hidden behind an accordion. The algorithm assumes that if you have chosen to collapse this information, it is secondary.

This approach reflects a behavioral reality: the majority of visitors never expand collapsible sections. Google therefore adjusts its assessment accordingly. If your strategic content is hidden by default, the engine assumes it is not essential for understanding the page.

How does this devaluation technically manifest?

Google crawls and indexes hidden content, that's a fact. The problem is not the lack of indexing, but the weighting applied during ranking. Text placed in an accordion receives a lower semantic weight than that displayed directly in the visible DOM.

Specifically, if your main keywords are hidden in a tab, they contribute less to the topic modeling of the page. The TF-IDF of collapsed terms is diluted, and their impact on positioning for targeted queries decreases proportionally.

Does this rule apply uniformly to all formats?

No. Google distinguishes between mobile and desktop. On mobile, certain collapsible sections are accepted as standard UX (especially FAQs). On desktop, tolerance is lower since screen space allows for more content to be displayed natively.

The nature of the content also plays a role. A FAQ structured in an accordion is treated differently than a hidden SEO text block to save visual space. Structured data FAQPage can partially compensate for the devaluation by signaling editorial intent.

  • Hidden content = reduced semantic weight, not absence of indexing
  • Mobile-first indexing emphasizes the issue: what is collapsed on mobile is collapsed for Google
  • Structured FAQs (schema.org) benefit from some tolerance due to structured data
  • Dedicated URLs = recommended technical solution for strategic content
  • The UX context justifies or not the accordion: navigation vs. SEO concealment

SEO Expert opinion

Is Google's position consistent with real-world observations?

Yes and no. On tested e-commerce sites, product pages with fully visible descriptions by default indeed perform better than those using a "Read more". The ranking gap is measurable, especially for long-tail queries where detailed content makes a difference.

But on mobile, UX reality often imposes compromises. A 3000-word page displayed all at once kills conversion rates. Sites that intelligently use accordions to structure without hiding essential information maintain decent rankings. [To be verified] The negative impact seems proportional to the ratio of hidden content to visible content rather than absolute.

What nuances should be added to this guideline?

Google speaks of "less relevant content", not penalties. The devaluation is not binary. An accordion containing 10% of the total text has a negligible impact. A block of 800 hidden words on a page with 200 visible words, however, poses a problem.

The second point: Mueller recommends clean URLs for each section. This is the theoretical solution, but it fragments internal PageRank and dilutes the thematic authority of the parent page. On a blog, creating 5 distinct URLs for what could be a pillar article with 5 sections is not always optimal. The cure can be worse than the disease.

In what cases does this rule not apply strictly?

News and media sites have more flexibility. Their content benefits from freshness that compensates for the structure. Google knows that a mobile news article uses accordions due to editorial constraints, not to manipulate rankings.

Transactional pages (e-commerce, SaaS) are judged on different signals: click rates, conversions, behavioral signals. If your technical specs are in an accordion but users convert well, Google will not penalize you heavily. The algorithm incorporates the business context of the page.

Warning: A/B tests show that expanding all content rarely improves both SEO and conversion at the same time. Prioritize exposing the first 200-300 words that contain your main keywords, then collapse the rest if necessary for UX.

Practical impact and recommendations

What can you do with currently accordion content?

Start with an audit. Identify the pages where hidden content contains your main target keywords. Use a Screaming Frog or Oncrawl crawl with JavaScript rendering to compare the initial DOM and the complete DOM. The discrepancies reveal what Google struggles to see.

Next, prioritize. SEO strategic pages (those generating organic traffic or that you target for business queries) must display their critical content directly. Support or documentation pages can keep accordions without major impact.

What mistakes should you avoid during the redesign?

Don’t abruptly turn all your accordions into visible content. 5000-word pages displayed all at once kill engagement, and Google detects this through behavioral signals (time on page, scroll depth, bounce rate). You risk losing on both fronts.

Avoid the lazy solution of "Read more" with anchor links. This is still hidden content for Google. If you opt for dedicated URLs as suggested by Mueller, ensure that each child page has enough substance (minimum 300 words) and a solid internal link structure pointing to the parent.

How to check the impact of your changes?

Implement a controlled test on a segment of similar pages. Keep 50% in accordions, deploy 50% with visible content. Monitor positions for 8-12 weeks (the time Google takes to reassess). Also compare engagement metrics to avoid false SEO positives.

Use Google Search Console to monitor impressions and CTR of the modified pages. An improvement in ranking without a decrease in CTR validates the approach. If CTR drops despite better positions, it indicates that UX has deteriorated, and behavioral signals will negate the SEO gain.

  • Index your site with JS rendering to identify discrepancies between visible/hidden content
  • Extract the first 200-300 words from each strategic accordion and display them by default
  • Implement schema.org FAQPage on true FAQs (not on disguised content)
  • A/B test on a sample before global deployment
  • Monitor positions AND engagement metrics for 3 months post-change
  • Keep accordions on secondary content (legal mentions, non-SEO detailed specs)
Restructuring hidden content requires a hybrid approach: expose essential SEO while preserving mobile UX. The first 300 words should carry your semantic strategy, and the rest can be collapsed if it improves engagement. These trade-offs between ranking, conversion, and user experience often require specialized expertise. Engaging a specialized SEO agency allows you to obtain an accurate technical diagnosis and a redesign strategy tailored to your business KPIs, without risking what already works.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Le contenu en accordéon est-il indexé par Google ?
Oui, Google crawle et indexe le contenu masqué dans les accordéons. Le problème n'est pas l'absence d'indexation, mais la pondération réduite de ce contenu lors du calcul du ranking. Il compte moins pour déterminer la pertinence de la page.
Les FAQ structurées en accordéon sont-elles pénalisées ?
Non, si elles utilisent les données structurées FAQPage correctement. Google reconnaît que les FAQ nécessitent une structure repliable pour l'UX. La dévaluation vise surtout les contenus stratégiques cachés pour manipuler l'expérience visuelle sans raison éditoriale légitime.
Faut-il créer des URL séparées pour chaque section actuellement en accordéon ?
Pas systématiquement. Cette solution dilue le PageRank et fragmente l'autorité thématique. Privilégiez d'abord l'affichage direct du contenu critique. Les URL séparées sont pertinentes pour des sous-thématiques vraiment distinctes qui méritent leur propre positionnement.
Comment savoir si mes accordéons impactent négativement mon SEO ?
Crawlez votre site avec rendu JavaScript et comparez le contenu visible initial au contenu total. Si vos mots-clés principaux sont masqués et que vos positions stagnent malgré un bon contenu, c'est un signal. Testez l'affichage direct sur un échantillon de pages et mesurez l'évolution sur 8-12 semaines.
Les accordéons sont-ils traités différemment sur mobile et desktop ?
Oui. L'indexation mobile-first signifie que Google évalue votre site selon la version mobile. Les accordéons sont plus tolérés sur mobile car standard UX, mais leur contenu reste dévalué. Si votre version desktop affiche tout et votre mobile replie, c'est la version mobile qui fait foi pour le ranking.
🏷 Related Topics
Content Crawl & Indexing AI & SEO Domain Name Pagination & Structure

🎥 From the same video 22

Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 49 min · published on 22/09/2016

🎥 Watch the full video on YouTube →

Related statements

💬 Comments (0)

Be the first to comment.

2000 characters remaining
🔔

Get real-time analysis of the latest Google SEO declarations

Be the first to know every time a new official Google statement drops — with full expert analysis.

No spam. Unsubscribe in one click.